Jul 20 2011

TRIPLE THREAT

I’m torn between finishing off three different projects at the moment. It’s a little hectic!

This contract project keeps going – the client’s requested a few minor changes over the past couple days, which is cool and they’ve been accommodated. Still, I think it’s done now.

Reels of Steel is progressing slowly in the gaps. Much of the game’s feel comes down to the physics of the rope, which needs to work differently when it’s cast and when it’s pulled taut and so on, so I’ve been tweaking that. It’s coming together!

As for project number three, I haven’t even looked at Fear is Vigilance yet this week. Still, I know it’s waiting for me to go in, fix up the analytics code and start pitching to sponsors.

The main thing is, I’m recovered from last week and the jam and I’m getting back on track. ONWARD.

Jul 18 2011

JAMMIN

TIGJAM TIGJAM TIGJAM TIGJAM

The weekend was ace! I made a few games, met lots of cool people, somehow got enough sleep…

Alistair put some photos up on Google+. Most of the weekend was spent feverishly dev’ing away upstairs in the CB2 café, but after they kicked us out in the evenings we headed to The Tram Depot, possibly the only pub in the world to have Grolsch Blond on tap. It’s all the better for it.

Stephen Lavelle (increpare) kept the whole thing running, walking round every few hours to issue themes for another three hour jam. Hardly anyone did a game for each three hour jam, of course – that way would lie madness – but each new jam was a fresh project. As the weekend wore on people began to stick with their favourites and develop them further.

I fell in love with the second project I started, so stuck with that to the exclusion of all else. But before I talk about that, here’s the first. I made it on Saturday in about four hours, and it’s an arcadey game about ants and bears and cherries that explode:

It’s an unbalanced mess, but it’s fairly dynamic. Dragging a cherry trail to an ant hill (hive? lol) brings a friendly ant out who’ll follow the trail and pick up other cherries for you, and if a bear finds a trail it can follow it to find ants to eat.

Here it is: BugsNThings

A few other jam games you should TOTALLY CHECK OUT are

– Inside a Starfield Sky by Alan Hazelden and Phillip Webster

Untris by increpare

line bender by increpare

The second game I started – the one I spent most of the weekend on – was a collaboration with a fantastic artist, so it’s much prettier. It’s a game about fishing with magnets, in which you hunt for robot fish hidden amongst the normal fish. It is REELS OF STEEL:

The art’s by Adam Vian of The Super Flash Bros, who is every bit as professional as he is talented. This one’s maybe half done, so you can’t play it yet but it should be out soon 😀

It’s been a busy few days so I took the day off. Back to work tomorrow!

Jul 15 2011

TERMINUS

I know I haven’t been updating this site the past few weeks, but I can now! See, this contract project?

DONE. Finished.

Money. 😀

With that out of the way I’m OFF TO TIGJAM to make games and music and stuff and hang out. Back on Monday, perhaps with some rubbish prototype games nobody will like!

Jul 08 2011

MODEM’S SONG

Another new track!

modem’s song

Next week is the last week of this contract project. The weekend after that I’m going to TIGJam UK 5, which should be fun! After that I’ll be back to work on my own stuff full time, which will be nice 🙂

Jul 06 2011

THE SHIFT IN INNOVATION

First, some music! It’s a lovely evening, so I wrote some lovely evening music.

whales of the west

SO. I’ve been thinking about landmark games recently. That is: games which have introduced new ideas, made a huge impact, and gone on to inform dozens of later games. And you know what? These games I feel comfortable pointing to as influential have shifted over the years.

Continue reading »

Jul 01 2011

ANALYTICS

Today’s quick Vigilance adventure was in analytics. Specifically, playtomic.

This is a very cool (free!) service for Flash, iOS and Unity games that lets you track how long people spend playing your game, how long they spend in each level, and so on. Apart from sheer engagement (how long people play the thing) the best use is of course to identify difficulty spikes  on various levels.

Then something else playtomic supports comes into action. You can set values on the server which your game will automatically load whenever it’s played, meaning you can instantly change the difficulty to balance out levels people are finding unwinnable. How cool is that?

Anyways, I’m implementing this stuff right now for Vigilance. Hopefully I won’t need it. I’d like to think I’m already balancing the game sensibly… but we’ll see!

Jun 29 2011

HOLDING PATTERN

Focused on contract work for the next few weeks, so updates are going to be a bit quiet. More info on Vigilance when something happens with it.

So. Here are a few quick indie game recommendations:

Don’t Take It Personally, Babe, It Just Ain’t Your Story is a “visual novel” type game about Facebook and privacy, told through high-school drama.

After a possibly ill-advised mid-life career change, your character starts work as an English Literature teacher. He is immediately given full access to his 16-year old students’ social network accounts and private messages and told to monitor them to watch out for bullying. Now, the game forces you to at least open all these messages, but the real question is: how comfortable do you feel doing so, and how comfortable are you acting on or sharing the private information you’ve accessed?

Beyond that, the way the story is told simultaneously in front of you and through social network messages means you’re constantly distracted from the action to keep on top of miscellaneous chatter. I found myself back in a conversation, unable to remember what had just been said, more than once. That hit a bit too close to home. Maybe I should close Twitter more often…

It’s not perfect, but it’s a powerful story that raises a few interesting issues between the 4chan riffs and winking lectures on metafiction.

Once you’ve played that, next up is Scorpion Psychiatrists of Saturn. This game’s a satirical mash-up of the above with Lesbian Spider Queens of Mars (itself a fairly pedestrian arena arcade game). It’s a bit of a fiddle to get it running, but it neatly skewers DTIPBIJAYS’s woollier aspects. GOOD WORK, apparently anonymous yet hilarious developer!

Okay BACK TO TWITTER

Jun 27 2011

SELECT DESTINATION

First off, here’s some music! I had to get up before 7am on Sunday, and then we had this heatwave… so I wrote a track about how mornings suck, and then there are attack robots.

– too goddamn early

Now. Where to?

This GPS is the level select screen for Vigilance’s arcade mode. Each stage has unique rules and its own high score.

Besides adding those new stages, I’ve also overhauled the title screen.

Continue reading »

Jun 24 2011

PROGRAMMING INDIE GAMES

Just a quick one today – I’d like to point all of you interested in indie development (that is, making your own games) towards this talk by Jonathan Blow, of Braid fame.

It’s a talk about how Computer Science best practice in programming is, often, harmful to indie games development, and the only way to cut large amounts of robust code fast is to write it as stupidly as you can get away with (with an awareness of best practice for wherever it’s necessary). This resonates strongly with my own experience.

In the AAA sector, games have to be cutting edge to be competitive – code has to be laser fast and highly optimised. In indie games, that simply doesn’t apply; for the most part, games just need to run. That means you can cut a lot of corners and probably save yourself years. My own coding style has independently evolved to be 90% or so in line with the approach Jonathan advocates, and I’m grateful to him for analysing the topic in this depth and sharing the results.

Also of note this week is the trailer for Indie Games: The Movie. It’s shaping up to be an interesting film, and if you haven’t seen the trailer yet, I highly recommend taking a look.

Jun 22 2011

CERTIFICATE OF MERIT

Have you been good?

Of course you have.

Have a Merit Badge.

Yes, I found time this evening to bodge achievements into Vigilance. I didn’t want to go crazy with these – a lot of Flash games get ridiculous, right? – so there are only nine. Some of them are quite tough though!

Feature creep continues, though I’m running out of large things to add! I’m considering a level select screen so you can play Arcade Mode on all the different backgrounds in the game. The disco level is cool, but I think people will object to the sheer garishness of the animated floor, and besides it gets a bit dull playing it over and over.

Just for fun, here’s my remaining todo list.

Continue reading »